Interesting Facts About Quartzite

Written by chrissie mayes

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Quartzite is a hard, smooth rock becoming more popular in the construction industry. (construction in progress image by Colin Buckland from Fotolia.com)

Quartzite is a metamorphic, or changed, rock. Changes in rocks are a slow process resulting in an altered appearance and form as a result of different conditions. Temperature, pressure and chemically changed environments are the usual catalysts of change in metamorphic rock.

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Background

Quartzite is originally sandstone that undergoes metamorphism via intense heat and pressure. The quartz grains are highly compacted resulting in a dense rock. Quartzite has a high degree of quartz -- 90 per cent or more -- and is the most concentrated, purest form of silica found on Earth. They tend to form when continents collide with each other to create mountains.

Features

Quartzite is usually snowy white and occasionally pink or grey. Dark colours are rare. The structure is smooth and hard-wearing with a granular appearance and tends to be seen in hill or mountain ranges, or on rocky coastlines. They have a glassy lustre due to the quartz content.

Uses

Quartzite is used for making bricks and other strong building materials. It is also growing in popularity as a decorative stone and has a limited use as crushed stone. As it is so hard, quartzite is not quarried as much as softer stone and tends to be taken from the surface rather than underground. Less than 6 per cent of all crushed stone produced in the United States is quartzite.